A. Watson Armour III Research Seminar Series

The A. Watson Armour III Research Seminar is The Field Museum's weekly academic seminar series. Talks are at noon on Wednesdays, and feature speakers from around the world presenting their research on topics related to the museum's four academic departments (Anthropology, Botany, Geology, and Zoology). Two seminars per year are set aside for speakers nominated by the museum's Environment, Culture, and Conservation group. Since 2005, over 200 speakers have presented talks in the series. Typically, the audience primarily consists of FMNH curators, collection managers, postdoctoral researchers, and graduate students, although faculty and students from Chicago-area colleges and universities, museum docents, and other museum staff sometimes attend as well. For more information on the seminar series, to suggest a speaker, or if you are coming from outside of the museum and need access to the seminar room, contact John Terrell (Anthropology), Matt von Konrat (Botany), Ken Angielczyk (Geology), or Margaret Thayer (Zoology).
Be sure to check this page regularly for additions and updates to the schedule.
Winter/Spring 2013
Jan. 2: Dr. Brett Scheffers. National University of Singapore/James Cook University. A New Dimension to Biogeography: Global Warming "Flattens" Tropical Forests. Lecture Hall II.
Jan. 9: No Seminar.
Jan. 16: No Seminar.
Jan 23: No Seminar.
Jan. 30: No Seminar.
Feb. 6: Dr. Tyler Lyson. National Museum of Natural History. The Origin of turtles and Their Enigmatic Shell: Insights from Morphology, Molecules, and Development. Lecture Hall II.
Feb. 13: Dr. Daniel Block. Chicago State University. Community Geography, Food Deserts and the Power of Maps. Lecture Hall II.
Feb. 20: Dr. Derek Sikes. University of Alaska, Fairbanks. Sampling Alaska's Fauna: Kasatochi Volcano, Ecosystem Reassembly, and Arctic Spider Diversity. Lecture Hall II.
Feb. 27: Dr. Michael Habib. University of Southern California. Mesozoic Sky Mastery: Flight and Gigantism in Pterosauria. Lecture Hall II.
March 6: Dr. Marcial Escudero. Field Museum of Natural History and Morton Arboretum. Chromosome Evolution and Diversification in Flowering Plants, Focusing on Holocentric Organisms. Lecture Hall II.
March 13: Dr. Alan Morris. University of Cape Town. Coming to America: Human Skeletons from Africa in American Museums. Lecture Hall II.
March 20: No Seminar.
March 27: No Seminar.
April 3: No Seminar.
April 10: Dr. Andrew Davis. University of Chicago. Stardust in the Laboratory. Lecture Hall II.
April 17: No Seminar.
April: 24: No Seminar.
May 1: Dr. Michel Brunet. Collège de France. Early Hominids. Lecture Hall II.
May 8: Dr. William Clemens. University of California, Berkeley. From T. rex to Asteroid Impact and Beyond (1901-2013): Studies of the Paleontology and Geology of the Hell Creek and Tullock Formations in Northeastern Montana. Lecture Hall II.
May 15: Dr. Thomas Olszewski. Texas A&M. The Permian Reef of West Texas: A Deep Time Case Study of How Complex Ecological Communities Respond to Environmental Change. Lecture Hall II.
May 22: Dr. Peter Raven. Missouri Botanical Garden. Strategies for Conservation in a Changing World. Lecture Hall I.
May 29: Dr. Dave Clarke. University of Illinois at Chicago & Field Museum of Natural History. Biodiversity and Biogeography of Rove Beetles in the South Temperate Region. Lecture Hall II.
June 5: Dr. Larisa DeSantis. Vanderbilt University. TBA. Zoology Classroom.
Other Recent Speakers
Fall 2012
Zhe-Xi Luo
John Taylor
María de los Angeles Herrera Campos
Larry Heaney
Grant Gallard
Erika Edwards
Joshua Bell
Christian Sidor
Jeremy Beaulieu
Bruce McCune
Ilona Bausch
Philip Millhouse
Sarah Mathews
Zhiwei Liu
Winter/Spring 2012
May Berenbaum
Rebecca Rowe
Mark Golitko
John Palmer
Naomi Pierce
Mitch Hendrickson
Douglas Boyer
Carl Alwmark
Douglas Boldender
Lisa Lucero
George Wilson
Paul Marek
Mathew Wedel
Sandra Carlson
Audrey Bouvier
Daniel Ksepka
Brian Fisher
Robert Stuebing
Robert Sussman
Valerie Clark

